The Atlanta Journal-Constitution

Recruiting

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it until at least January, meaning coaches cannot have in-person contact with recruits or families. Official and unofficial visits have been limited to the virtual variety. Coaches aren’t trav- eling to games Friday nights to evaluate talent.

To describe this year’s recruiting cycle as chaotic would be an understate­ment.

“The class of ’21 is a wild card,” Rivals.com recruiting analyst Chad Simmons said. “It’s going to be based all on tape and not in-per- son evals.”

There’s no script for col- leges and recruits for how to proceed, so how they’re able to adjust to what essentiall­y has become the Wild West could prove to be the differ- ence in a successful partnershi­p between the parties.

“Players and olleges are having to be creative,” 247Sports recruiting analyst Rusty Mansell said. “For the players, it’s about how you can be seen, and for the colleges, it’s going to be about how they make their decisions.”

Mansell and Simmons agree it will come down to player film. Mansell’s advice to recruits is, after three or four games, put together a clip of seven to nine plays and pin it to the top of their Twitter pages.

“That’s all you need,” Mansell said. “Even if you’re not playing, post a minute of good practice clips, film your workout — anything that a coach can evaluate.”

The chunks of important informatio­n each side will be missing from the other will make the decisions more difficult. For the colleges, Mansell believes not being

cable to independen­tly verify height/weight data creates a huge void in the informatio­n-gathering process. For the players, Carter said not being able to officially visit the campuses prevented recruits from fully know- ing what they were committing to. That has been taken from them — along with the once-in-a-lifetime experience of an all-expenses-paid offi- cial visit.

Carter went on virtual visits to Georgia and Ohio State. He described the process as awkward.

“I’d get on Zoom and the whole staff was there,” Carter said. “Not just the coaches, but the academic advisers, recruiting directors, everyone. In an in-person visit, they’re usually split up and you meet with each group individual­ly.”

Instead of strolling the campus, Carter settled for

North Gwinnett High’s Barrett Carter, a 4-star linebacker, committed to Clemson in May, months ahead of when he originally intended to make his decision. Circumstan­ces created by the pandemic is the reason he committed to the Tigers.

slideshows and prerecorde­d video of someone walking through the campus and facilities.

Simmons said recruits initially took the changes hard but have adjusted to the new reality.

“I think there was frustratio­n at first,” Simmons said. “(In the spring), most of them thought they’d be out of school for a week or two. That turned into months. Then, spring sports were canceled. Then visits were banned. Now there’s a realizatio­n and the tone has changed, and they’ve accepted it. It’s just going to be FaceTime, virtual visits and a lot of dialogue with coaches, and they’ll have to decide (on colleges) that way.”

Simmons observed an unusual spike in top-flight recruits committing during the summer, not just in his

coverage area of Georgia, Alabama and Mississipp­i, but around the country. The majority of those commitment­s have stuck, he said.

“They felt the pressure to lock up their spot now before it’s gone,” Simmons said.

Carter felt the pressure, too, but not because he was concerned about a roster spot.

“When the dead period hit, coaches had a lot of time on their hands,” Carter said. “So they’d just be hitting me up — 50 text messages, 10-15 missed calls a day. It was getting super hectic. I was still in school taking finals. It was getting stressful, and I knew Clemson was where I wanted to be, so that’s why I committed early.”

Mondon initially told 247Sports he planned to commit in June, but after visits were prohibited, he instead announced his five

finalists during the summer — Auburn, Georgia, Florida, Tennessee and LSU.

He has taken a few virtual visits and said he’ll make his decision based on how conversati­ons with coaches go.

“I’ve already visited every school in my top five before,” Mondon said. “Those would have been my official visits, too. It’s tough that I can’t go because I was excited to, but there’s nothing I can do about it now. I have to keep moving on. I’ll have to look at factors like my relationsh­ip with the coaches, how I fit in with the team and look back on my visits from before.”

Mondon plans to commit ahead of the December signing period, when he will sign and enroll early. Carter also plans to sign in December, instead of the traditiona­l signing day in February, but won’t enroll early.

 ??  ??
 ?? PHOTOS BY CHRISTINA MATACOTTA / FOR THE AJC ?? Smael Mondon, a 4-star linebacker for Paulding County, intended to commit to a school during summer but has pushed his decision to an undetermin­ed date as he navigates the recruiting process through the pandemic.
PHOTOS BY CHRISTINA MATACOTTA / FOR THE AJC Smael Mondon, a 4-star linebacker for Paulding County, intended to commit to a school during summer but has pushed his decision to an undetermin­ed date as he navigates the recruiting process through the pandemic.

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